<h2> ALLELUIA HEIGHT </h2>
<p>Obedience to the seasons' marshall-rod,<br/>
That is a law of God,<br/>
Here beauty passes with her gorgeous train,<br/>
On paths that range from bud to grain.<br/>
O, here the searching eyes<br/>
In traffic for the soul's good gain<br/>
Earn wealth of rare delight.<br/>
Far pathways of surprise,<br/>
In color's frumenty bedight,<br/>
Lead off from avenues of day<br/>
Through miles of pageantries:<br/>
And from the starry chancels of the night<br/>
And the inscrutable farther skies,<br/>
Beyond where trackless comets stray,<br/>
Outspreads a world in thought's array.<br/>
And lo! the heart's true voices sing<br/>
From the exulting reverent breast,<br/>
And lips proclaim, with adoration blessed,<br/>
Glad Alleluias to the King.<br/>
<br/>
Prompt is our praise unto a jewelled queen<br/>
In all her courtly splendor set,<br/>
(Fair as those fairylands are seen<br/>
By childhood's other sight):<br/>
But if in pauper mien,<br/>
Too poor for stray regret<br/>
Where crowded streets affright<br/>
She stood in beggary,<br/>
Unknown, though faithful to her high degree,—<br/>
O, then her praise 'twere easy to forget.<br/>
Yet ever here,<br/>
For all of time's prompt fickleness—<br/>
From plenteous June and wide largess<br/>
Of full midsummer days,<br/>
To dwarf December pitiless<br/>
Amid the earth's uncomplimented ways—<br/>
Yea, constant through the changeful year,<br/>
This queenly Height commands our praise.<br/>
To stand in meek unflinching hardihood<br/>
When fortune blows its storm of fright,<br/>
And work to full effect that good<br/>
Resolved in open days of clearer sight—<br/>
O, this is worth!<br/>
That daily sees the soul<br/>
To braver liberties give birth,<br/>
That heeds not time's annoy,<br/>
And hears surrounding voices roll<br/>
Perennial circumstance of joy.<br/>
Then come not only when the springtime blows<br/>
The old familiar strangeness of its breath<br/>
Across the long-lain snows,<br/>
And chants her resurrected songs<br/>
About the tombs of death;<br/>
Nor yet when summer glows<br/>
In roseate throngs<br/>
And works her plenitude of deeds<br/>
By tangled dells and waving meads,<br/>
Come here in beauty's pilgrimage:<br/>
Nor when the autumn reads<br/>
Illuminate her page<br/>
With tints of magicry besprent<br/>
Of iridescent wonderment—<br/>
(As scrolls in old monastic towers,<br/>
Done in an earnest far-off age).<br/>
But choose to come in winter hours<br/>
To see how character can live,<br/>
How noble character will give<br/>
Through desolate distress<br/>
And cold neglect's duress,<br/>
The fulness of its powers<br/>
And win the soul its victor sign.<br/>
Yea, come when in a peasant gown,<br/>
Amid the ample banners of the pine,<br/>
And the resounding harpers of the vine,<br/>
Lone winter holds upon the Height<br/>
Her court in full renown.<br/>
Obedient her courtiers go,<br/>
Their gonfalons aloft and bright,<br/>
And scatter pearls of snow;<br/>
Her sturdy knighthood wear for crown<br/>
Prismatic sheen in young delight,<br/>
And wave the cedar oriflamme on high;<br/>
While windward heralds cry,<br/>
Across the battlements of earth<br/>
To parapets along the sky,<br/>
The lauds of character's full worth.<br/>
<br/>
The winter passes and the days come in<br/>
Vibrant with spring.<br/>
And men find welcome at the Easter tomb,<br/>
Reward they win,<br/>
Who make their hearts with courage sing<br/>
Through Lenten opportunity of gloom:<br/>
(Not as the Pharisees,<br/>
With faces lacrimose,<br/>
Who wear pretence of ashen woes,<br/>
And murmur like the tuneless bees,<br/>
Whose honies are hypocrisies),<br/>
But men of character's delight,<br/>
Who like this valiant Height<br/>
Still serving through the bleakest day,<br/>
With humble offerings of sound and sight,<br/>
Do steadfast stand and pray:<br/>
O, count those souls of noble worth,<br/>
And God's good pleasure on His earth,<br/>
Who still, if joy or pain<br/>
Brings sun or rain,<br/>
Heroic sing<br/>
The law of Alleluia to the King.<br/></p>
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